makar0n
Contributor
Yes, but I wonder if it could also have become unseated/shattered during the implosion. Not sure if we'd expect to see any deformation in the titanium around it if that was the initial failure point. The absence of any large pieces of the carbon fiber hull section might indicate that whether or not that was the failure point, it was reduced to pieces. Frankly I'd think the top three candidates are fatigue in the carbon fiber hull, a failure in one of the bonds between a titanium ring and the carbon fiber hull, and the viewport.
This interview is just full of nope for me ... oh, so that crackling noise is just weaker carbon fibers in the hull breaking under water pressure? I would have noped right the hell out after hearing that explanation.
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OceanGate CEO Stockton Rush talks Titan sub's design, carbon fiber hull, safety and more in 2022 interviews
"Sunday Morning" correspondent David Pogue talked in Summer 2022 with the man behind the creation of the submersible that catastrophically imploded, killing five, during a June 2023 dive to the wreck of the Titanic.www.cbsnews.com
He laughs a lot. Like either a madman or somebody hiding something. And his recipe for any issues is "we will just surface". I suppose nobody told him teleportation is not a thing yet. Plus the whole "we are explorers, adventurers, scientist, mission specialist" - sure, you are just bunch of rich people, going down to a graveyard to see dead rich people. And as it turns out, join them too.
POGUE: How dangerous is it?
RUSH: I don't think it's very dangerous.
A classic "Hold my beer"™ moment.
RUSH: The key thing we've done with the pressure vessel is, it's made of carbon fiber.
Carbon fiber is a great material. It's better than titanium. It's better than a lot of other materials.